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- SEO for Membership Sites: 7 Strategies to Rank Gated Content in 2026by Shahzad Saeed on 15/06/2026 at 10:00
If you’re running a membership site in WordPress, then you’ve probably run into a frustrating problem: you publish great content, but it doesn’t show up in Google. That usually happens because your most valuable content is hidden behind a login page or paywall. While that’s… Read More » The post SEO for Membership Sites: 7 Strategies to Rank Gated Content in 2026 first appeared on WPBeginner.
- How to Verify Your SEO Is Intact After a WordPress Domain Migrationby Nouman Yaqoob on 12/06/2026 at 10:00
Changing your domain name is one of the scariest SEO decisions a WordPress site owner can make. Done right, your search rankings survive the move mostly intact. Done wrong, you can lose months of work overnight. I’ve audited post-migration sites where everything looked fine on… Read More » The post How to Verify Your SEO Is Intact After a WordPress Domain Migration first appeared on WPBeginner.
- How to Find and Fix Orphan Pages That Are Killing Your WordPress SEOby Allison on 10/06/2026 at 10:00
You’ve done everything right: published your blog posts, optimized the titles, maybe even built a few backlinks. But traffic still isn’t coming, and you can’t figure out why. Now, before you publish another post, it’s worth checking whether orphan pages are working against you. Orphan… Read More » The post How to Find and Fix Orphan Pages That Are Killing Your WordPress SEO first appeared on WPBeginner.
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- Chinese Hackers Abused Google Workspace Rules to Steal Research and Defense Emailsby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 15/06/2026 at 19:44
A China-linked espionage group hid inside North American medical, academic, and military research networks for more than a year, quietly stealing sensitive research and defense email. The way in was a backdoor on their REDCap research servers that stole login credentials. The exfiltration was the unusual part: the attackers rewired the victims' own Google Workspace rules to copy any message
- North Korean Hackers Are Turning Developer Tools Into Malware Delivery Channelsby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 15/06/2026 at 19:32
Cybersecurity researchers have flagged two malicious cyber campaigns that exhibit similarities with a persistent North Korean threat cluster known as Contagious Interview (aka Famous Chollima, HexagonalRodent, and Void Dokkaebi). According to a report published by Proofpoint, the threat actor has been found orchestrating phishing campaigns using developer role recruitment or code review themes
- LiteLLM Vulnerability Chain Lets Low-Privilege Users Take Over AI Gateway Serversby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 15/06/2026 at 16:39
A default low-privilege account on a LiteLLM proxy can climb to full admin and run code on the server by chaining three vulnerabilities, researchers at Obsidian Security disclosed LiteLLM is a widely deployed open-source AI gateway that brokers calls to more than 100 model providers behind one OpenAI-compatible interface. A server takeover exposes every provider key it holds, the secrets that
- One-Click Microsoft 365 Copilot Flaw Could Have Let Attackers Steal Emails, Files, and MFA Codesby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 15/06/2026 at 15:09
A single click on a trusted Microsoft link could have let an attacker pull emails, calendar details, and indexed files out of Microsoft 365 Copilot Enterprise Search. Researchers at Varonis Threat Labs chained three bugs into a one-click exfiltration path they call SearchLeak. Because the link pointed to a real microsoft.com domain, traditional anti-phishing and URL filtering tools were
- âš¡ Weekly Recap: Chrome 0-Day, UniFi Exploits, macOS Stealers, VPN Flaw and Moreby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 15/06/2026 at 13:49
Stuff broke again. Not in a movie way. An old tool was left exposed. An abandoned package was abused. A deprecated feature was still running in prod. This week is the same lesson in a new form: phishing kits are easier to rent, AI names are useful bait, old login paths still fail, and forgotten software keeps becoming someone else's entry point. Scroll through the full Monday Cybersecurity








